Nicole
Smallman and Bibaa Henry were stabbed to death at a park in Wembley earlier
this month.
The mother of
two sisters murdered in a park said her grief had "been taken to another
place" after two officers were suspended amid allegations they took
selfies next to their bodies.
Mina Smallman
has complained about the Met's initial response - saying she had to organise a
search for her daughters.
No-one has
been charged with the murders.
Speaking to
the BBC, Mrs Smallman, the former Archdeacon of Southend, said the pictures
"dehumanised" her children.
"They
were nothing to them and what's worse, they sent them on to members of the
public," she said.
Senior
officers from the Met and the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC)
personally visited the family to explain what had happened after they were made
aware of the alleged photographs.
Mrs Smallman
said she was told the photos showed the girls' faces and she fears the images
will appear on the internet.
"This
has taken our grief to another place," she said.
"If ever
we needed an example of how toxic it has become, those police officers felt so
safe, so untouchable, that they felt they could take photographs of dead black
girls and send them on.
"It
speaks volumes of the ethos that runs through the Metropolitan Police."
The IOPC said
the pictures were allegedly "shared with a small number of others",
adding the Met was "handling matters involving those members of the public
who may have received those images".
Yesterday
evening, the Met said two officers had been arrested on suspicion of misconduct
in public office and suspended from duty.
Met
Commissioner Cressida Dick said she was "disgusted" with the
allegations against the officers.
Mrs Smallman
said she had coordinated a search operation on weekend her daughters died and
it was Nicole's boyfriend, Adam, who found the sisters' bodies and the murder
weapon.
She says the
police were "making assumptions" when they didn't immediately respond
when the sisters were first reported missing.
"I knew
instantly why they didn't care. They didn't care because they looked at my
daughter's address and thought they knew who she was.
"A black
woman who lives on a council estate."
Ms Smallman,
27, had been with friends celebrating Ms Henry's 46th birthday at the park on
the evening of 5 June.
Detectives
believe they were killed by a stranger who repeatedly stabbed them in the early
hours of 6 June - their bodies were not found until the following day.
Forensic
officers have since been searching a large area of the park including a pond
and have trawled through hundreds of thousands of tonnes of rubbish that was
accidently cleared from the scene.
Detectives
believe the killer received injuries in the attack "which caused
significant bleeding".
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